- Obesity and Metabolism
- The Impact of Different Anthropometric Measures on Sustained Normotension, White Coat Hypertension, Masked Hypertension, and Sustained Hypertension in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes
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Baris Afsar
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Endocrinol Metab. 2013;28(3):199-206. Published online September 13, 2013
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3803/EnM.2013.28.3.199
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Abstract
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- Background
Many studies have aimed to determine whether body mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC), or waist to hip ratio (WHR) best predicts hypertension in diabetic patients, with conflicting results. However, no study has examined the specific relationship between these anthropometric parameters with sustained normotension (SNT), white coat hypertension (WCHT), masked hypertension (MHT), and sustained hypertension (SHT) based on office and ambulatory blood pressure (BP) measurements in these patients. MethodsPatients with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes underwent the following procedures: history taking, measurements of anthropometric parameters, office and ambulatory BP measurements, physical examination, laboratory analysis, and random and 24-hour urine analysis. ResultsIn total, there were 65 dippers and 37 nondipper patients. None of the anthropometric parameters were different between the dippers and the nondippers. There were 25 patients with SNT, 32 with WCHT, seven with MHT, and 38 with SHT. A comparison of anthropometric parameters between these four groups of patients showed that WC (P=0.016) and WHR (P=0.015) were different among all groups. According to regression analysis, only BMI was independently related with MHT (odds ratio [OR], 1.373, P=0.022), whereas only WC has been associated with SHT (OR, 1.321, P=0.041). ConclusionAmong anthropometric parameters, only WC and WHR were different in SNT, WCHT, MHT, and SHT in newly diagnosed patients with type 2 diabetes.
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Citations
Citations to this article as recorded by
- Masked arterial hypertension: what is known and what expected to be learned?
A.Yu. Gorshkov, A.A. Fedorovich, O.M. Drapkina Profilakticheskaya meditsina.2020; 23(6): 143. CrossRef - Association of the conicity index with diabetes and hypertension in Brazilian women
Mirelli Dantas Andrade, Maria Camila Pruper de Freitas, Alyne Mayumi Sakumoto, Caroline Pappiani, Samantha Caesar de Andrade, Viviane Laudelino Vieira, Nágila Raquel Teixeira Damasceno Archives of Endocrinology and Metabolism.2016; 60(5): 436. CrossRef - Brief Review of Articles in 'Endocrinology and Metabolism' in 2013
Won-Young Lee Endocrinology and Metabolism.2014; 29(3): 251. CrossRef
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